Make the punctuation consistent on your resume. Either end everything with a period or don't (I personally prefer don't. It looks a little weird on the stuff that's not a full sentence and looks really weird if you have half your stuff punctuated and half not).
I have no idea what credit average means but I assume it makes sense down there. Rule of thumb in the US is that if your GPA (I assume this is the Aussie equivalent) isn't worth bragging about don't include it, though idk what "Credit Average" is on the scale. Try to find an additional bullet point about something that isn't standard and routine. Something that's a bit more distinctive about your education, I guess. Putting your graduation date in the header for your Bachelor's is weird, as you haven't graduated yet and that format kinda gives the first impression that your Bachelors is completed. Just change it to Feb 2016 - Present, as you are currently a student. I'm going to assume that SRC and School Captain make sense to any other Australian, but maybe have your tenure as School Captain listed like for SRC Rep? Maybe unabbreviate SRC, but idk. I have no idea what the Above and Beyond Award is but at least putting the year on it or something would help.
Add an extra space between the Experience header and the Education section. Spacing should be consistent with the spacing between the Experience section and the Technical Skills header, plus it helps break up the sections. Change Work to Worked/ing on the first bullet point, and "at home" to "from home". Unless it's an Australian dialect thing, change learnt to learned. Actually, no. Learn implies you couldn't at first or beforehand which is bad in this case. Just go straight to "Took" or something along those lines. Change "often had to learn" to something else, as that implies your education has been insufficient (yes, I know it's in progress but still). "Was able to" or something similar is more complimentary to yourself. "Requirements" sounds weird to me as a word choice but I'll chalk it up to Australian vernacular.
The Technical Skills section is very well formatted, however the spacing between the header and the content needs to be increased to be consistent with the rest of the resume and feel a bit less cluttered.
Seconding the hell out of Zircom saying your resume should drop down with a link to download. Keep it all on the webpage.
Your last name is a tongue twister particularly to read. Consider legally changing it.
The three buttons on your website aren't actually buttons. They don't do anything but highlight when you mouse over them, and that's real damn annoying. They should drop down into examples to prove your talent in each button. Digital Editing should open up to highlights from your portfolio with a link to the larger selection in the bottom right of that tab. Software Engineer should likewise open up to a software portfolio with a link to your github in the bottom right (having a second github button at the bottom of the page is fine). Make sure to have a brief description of each item in your software portfolio highlighting not just what it is but any relevant skills/techniques you used. I'm not that knowledgeable about programming but the languages used seems like a basic inclusion. Leadership obviously doesn't have a portfolio but you should still have examples to back up your claim. Your resume says you were a school captain. I don't know what the fuck that is but if that's leadership-y include it with a brief elaboration. But make sure you include things more recent from university/work, even if it's a standard "group leader in class project x, y, and z". Recency matters, and high school relevancy drops off considerably over time.
Also doubling down on what Zircom said about all the empty space and repeating your social media icons. If you could get your email at the bottom to turn into a link that'd be a good touch.